Pages from diversified magic

Page 1

HARRY LEAT.


INDOCILE PRIVADO

LOQUACITY.


COMPRISING A NTMBER OK ORIGINAL THICKS. HIMOROCS PATTER, AND SHORT ARTICLES OF GENERAL INTEREST. BY

HARRY LEAT. I »RICE -A/tf. N E I 1 .

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Tin' s a m e claim

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a r e n o t old t r i c k s flint t h e w r i t e r h a s a l r e a d y w o r k e d to d e a t h ,

a n d h a s no f u r t h e r use for. ;

t h e c o n t e n t s is "' c o l l e c t e d . " w a s t e d on c a r d t r i c k s .

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Introduction.

9

Organ Pipe Pagoda.

14

The Ribbon Flag.

20

The Eclipse Ventriloquia! • Figure.

23

Lighted Matches From Matchbox.

36

A Spring Production.

40

Printing Tricks.

46

Wand - Revolver - Fan.

49

The Rainbow,

51

Self Locking Sand Frame.

56

Shadows on the Blind.

60

A Shadowgraph y Screen.

67

Open Letter to Mr. J. A. KSUM\

70

The Magical Menagerie.

74

Animated Pictures.

^ < >

The Great Damphool Vanish.

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Stop Press,

101

New Books.

102

Forty Years In & Around Magic. Thoughtful Magic.

1015 10-1



INTRODUCTION. I have often been asked why I devote so much of my time to the working out of ideas in mechanical magic, instead of writing about the other branches. The fact that I am a maker of apparatus has not been an influencing factor. By all the rules of the game ( as writing is not part of my business ) I should be pleased to get away from mechanical magic for a change; but 1 have no wish to do so. 1 consider the description of apparatus to be more useful to the average conjurer than all the miscellaneous sleights and card tricks that overflow the magical literary market to-day. Any conjurer worthy of the name should be able to work out hi? own sleights to suit his own style if he has a proper knowledge of the rudiments of magic; but a knowledge of magic will not always suggest mechanical tricks, or the variation of their use. Muring my connection with magic 1 have met many hundreds of amateur and wouId-he conjurers, and 1 invariably found that they were obsessed with two ideas. One was that conjuring apparatus was teriblv expensive, and they wished to dispense with it entirely; and the other was to wheedle out of us older conjurers sufficient knowledge ( which they thought we must possess ) to produ ce an entirely new act. Their confidence never surprised me, or caused ill-feeling. Instead, I have gone to pains to disillusion them, and many have left me with their hopes somewhat shattered, but - at the same time - with a far sr.ner outlook in regard to magic. A musician will save and scrape to purchase a good instrument, or he knows it is hopeless without one. Even skilled mechanics have to use tools that arc e.\pen.sive. Athletes aim for the best boats, cycles, and other necessary adjuncts. They do not take any old thing, and say :- " T h a t will do." In almost every channel we see much the same process and ambition to get the best to do the best, with the one exception - Magic. The conjurer's motto is "How little" he can pay for apparatus, and the quality invariably goes down to meet the price. Used cards, shabby silks, home-made apparatus, etc., seem to be quite good enough. Some performers think it is only necessary to show an audience a lot of spots on cards and other places, and they have reached the pinnacle of success. Ciood eyesight is a rare thing these days, and card tricks can only be seen by those in close proximity to the performer. A card act is undoubtedly the cheapest act a would-be conjurer could get together; but who has ever made a success with cards


alone. Howard Thurston was a card mauipulator of wonderful ability, but the act did not last him very long. Fred Wilkinson had a splendid card act, and his floating card was the best of them all; but the life of the act was short. Claude Cioldin has a partner or assistant, and uses 00 per cent of his time in humorous cross-talk to get his card act over. The Great Maurice fascinates with his broken English the first time one witnesses his act. At the St. George's Hall 1 once watched a conjurer who had three cards selected, returned to the pack, and shuffled. The pack was then spread upon a table, and performer was blindfolded. He quickly stabbed one of the chosen cards. Then he hesitated, and appeared to have lost all idea where the next card was situated. His hand wandered all over the table, stopping every now and again over a card when he pretended to receive some " influence " from it. 1 he performer never spoke one word to break the monotony, and each second seemed a minute, and each minute an hour. Half the audience could not see the cards on the table. At last he stabbed the second card, and I should not be accused of sarcasm if I added, to the great relief of the audience. Then the real agony commenced. The second card took long enough to find, hut it was quick compared with the third. Spot limes were used to illuminate the performer and his table, and at times the strain became so great that performer had to hold his brow. What for 1 do not know, for nothing was likely to drop out whilst a handkerchief was tied round the eyes and part of the forehead. Well, 1 will not bore my readers with a description of all the futile movements; but the card was eventually stabbed, and proved to be correct. How long the finding of those three cards took 1 cannot say. but to me it seemed hours. A gentleman sitting next to me said :- " I am not a conjurer, but I like watching tricks. Another exhibition of time wasting will cause me to alter my mind." I replied:- " Unfortunately it is the new era in Magic. These gentlemen are putting the "art" into it." I once witnessed a sleight-of-hand act which even the performer realized was impossible to put over satisfactorily, for he reproduced parts of his act by the aid of the Cinematograph so that the audience should see and realize its cleverness. When we come to conjuring proper, we find no small act with few props has ever topped the bill for long. Many will remember Chung Ling Soo's act when he opened at the Alhambra, London. He possessed no scenery, and the chief items of his act consisted of the Linking Rings, Fire eating, and the production of a Japanese umbrella from the back of a table. That was Soo's itart, but he hab brains; and he spent without stint until his act was worth thousands of pounds. This made his show unapproachable, and ensured its success. Yet this method of getting on is just what the budding conjurer fights against. "Apparatus is too dear, and


I want to dispense with it." lie docs; and he dispenses with bookings as well. He is always starting, and trusting for something good to turn up; but his heart is the only decent prop he has to rely upon. He talks about his skill in sleight-of-hand, and compares his ability with a presenter of illusions who only talks. He is deeply offended when he is told that his skill alone cannot be sold, whereas a spectacular show is always in demand. No act will earn big money, and get continuous bookings, until it is really worth it. Instead of commencing with the avowed object of dispensing with apparatus, the tyro should keep adding to his show until no .Manager or Agent would have the audacity to offer him a small salary. This also applies to Drawing Room work and Concerts, children are more interested in a production act than the finest combination trick with cards or coins ever devised. Concert work attracts the average class of man, and he wants something to look at as well as mental agitation. Now-a-days a conjurer seems ashamed to be seen carrying a bag or portmanteau; yet it is a hundred to one on a return engagement when the lady looks at the wondrous display of flags, paper, and apparatus, and says:- "it is awfully good of you to go to all this trouble to entertain us. However did you manage to bring it ? " We all like to think we have got our money's worth. When 1 first came into the magic business seriously, oui" address book only totalled two to three hundred names; but each represented a man who knew his business, and, what was more, how to entertain. Now the addresses number very many thousands. But what quility are they ? They are the Magical Societies' product - men who do more harm than good to magic. They are quite independent of magic for a livlihood, being clerks, cornchandlers, printers, or employees in other businesses during the day time; and therein lies the trouble. They are not genuine conjurers. They are the "half-baked" performers that that brilliant writer, Mr. Robertson Keene, refers to in his article proving that Alagic is not an Art, even though it can be made artistic. Of course Alagic is not an Art, but. as he says, a business. Magic is not a business with 95 per cent of the members of AAagical Societies, and consequently they have not the real interests of Magic at heart. During the day it is possibly :-And the next, Madam ? " During the evening they strut about the club room trusting to be mistaken for Professors of Magic. It is pathetic, for these are the men who are killing Magic. I do not know the age limits for membership to the various Societies, but 1 know that youths are made members, i am the last man on earth to argue against youth being served, for some of these boy members may be exceedingly clever; but the limit is reached when one buys a Magical Magazine, and finds that theEditor is an infant according to the law. Even supposing he had


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